Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Primates

Dedicated exclusively to field herping.

Moderator: Scott Waters

Post Reply
User avatar
Hans Breuer (twoton)
Posts: 3230
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 3:19 am
Location: Kuching, Sarawak (Borneo)
Contact:

Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Primates

Post by Hans Breuer (twoton) »

There are quite a number of primates on Borneo. While I'm partial to the weird ones such as tree shrews, slow loris, tarsiers, and of course the big hairless ones that live in stone dwellings and travel to their feeding grounds in metal contraptions, there's also a bunch of classic ones.

Here are a few Bornean orang-utans (Pongo pygmaeus) in various stages of semi-wildness, photographed in sanctuaries and rescue centers. The chap with the huge jowls (which serve to attact females, by the way - Brando, eat your heart out!) was rescued from some imbecile "owner" who had made him smoke cigarettes and drink hooch. He was also the first great ape in history to receive a full-scale eye operation after he had gnawed through a power line, blinding himself in the process. The fierce, toothy snarl is not a threat gesture - he was just catching raindrops (a fact I would have never realized, had not a staff member told me about it!)

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

If you want to help these fellers beyond mere donations, check out the Orang Utan Project. For a fee, you can live and work with the orangs at various rehab centers all over Borneo (and Sumatra). Looks expensive, but whatever's leftover after your food and lodging has been paid for, is a generous donation. And I've yet to meet anyone who didn't love it.

Also indigenous to Borneo, but dwellers of mangrove swamps rather than rainforests, are Asia's largest monkeys, the Proboscis monkeys (Nasalis larvatus) aka orang belanda - "Dutchman" in Malay, onaccounta their Western noses. At Bako National Park, these guys are so used to people that they let you stand right next to them while they pick and munch on mangrove leaves (only the youngest and most tender ones will do!)

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Macaques, in this case Long-tailed Macaques (Macaca fascicularis), are cute and interesting to watch, but also the scourge of many a tourist spot in Asia. I used to snicker at the ubiquitous "CAUTION - THIEVISH MONKEYS!!" signs, until the day a teenaged macaque ninjaed a freshly opened box of chocolate cookies from our table on the terrace at the Bako NP restaurant. First, he cased the joint from about ten feet away, and then took three long leaps, rocketed onto the table - virtually right under the noses of three adult humans! - grabbed the box, and then flew off the other side onto the lawn seven feet below us. An absolutely fantastic stunt that took less than two seconds. I'll never underestimate the little ^%$#@!s again. Ever.

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

All pictures by Marcus Kloft
User avatar
KingCam
Posts: 1020
Joined: April 11th, 2011, 1:03 pm

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Primates

Post by KingCam »

That's incredible! I can't imagine seeing primates in the wild like that O_O Thanks so much for that post, those photos are top notch!
User avatar
Dr. Dark
Posts: 380
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 4:39 pm
Location: Concord TWP, Ohio

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Primates

Post by Dr. Dark »

Hans, that was fantastic! That big old male orang is a stunningly handsome creature! Those close-ups were incredible!
User avatar
geckoguy747
Posts: 325
Joined: August 15th, 2010, 10:46 pm
Location: san bernardino mtns

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Primates

Post by geckoguy747 »

awesome!
josh
User avatar
chrish
Posts: 3295
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 11:14 pm
Location: San Antonio, TX
Contact:

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Primates

Post by chrish »

Awesome stuff. In my time in East Kalimantan I desparately wanted to see Proboscis Monkeys but never did.

No Gibbons? They were always my favorite sights (and sounds) from Borneo.
User avatar
Andy Avram
Posts: 897
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 10:37 am
Location: NE Ohio

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by Andy Avram »

Hans, I think we should start a herper exchange program (and this isn't even a herp post!). You come to Ohio for a year and I'll take your place. Just think of all the snow you can see for 5 months or so!

Cool primates. I am not a fan of seeing them in zoos, but in the wild they are incredible. Mammal forum?

Andy
User avatar
Jeff Lemm
Posts: 411
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 8:08 pm

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by Jeff Lemm »

Very cool Hans!!
User avatar
crocdoc
Posts: 473
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 11:43 pm
Location: Australia

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by crocdoc »

Fantastic. I loved the proboscis monkeys in particular.
User avatar
Warren
Posts: 351
Joined: June 9th, 2010, 7:17 am

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by Warren »

Ubi mel ibi apes
User avatar
Hans Breuer (twoton)
Posts: 3230
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 3:19 am
Location: Kuching, Sarawak (Borneo)
Contact:

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by Hans Breuer (twoton) »

Thanks, all!

Yes, the pix are indeed quite nice, and the reason for this is that it wasn't me who took them. My former high school buddy Marcus visited me last October for two weeks, and since he's a much more accomplished photographer than I am, we made a deal: I'd be his driver, guide, and translator, and in return he'd be my photo serf. Whatever I wanted photographed, he photographed. An arrangement that worked out quite nicely :-)

There are gibbons in Sarawak, but AFAIK, mostly in the larger jungles in the north. I've never been further away from Kuching than sixty miles, if you can believe that, hence no wild gibbons for me. My son, who's traveled into the hinterland quite a bit, has heard, but not seen them (in the Kapit area)

Andy, I'd take you up on your offer, but only for the summer. I don't do winters anymore, not even subtropical ones. (My parents are currently suffering subzero temperatures in Germany - we're talking frozen water pipes...I shudder at the thought that I grew upin such a hellish place.) Let's talk about it after I've been to all the places I want to go first - Kakadu NP, a visit to Rom Whitaker in India, Komodo Island....all of them just a few airplane hours away. Another perk of living in Borneo - the proximity to all those cool places, and the ultra-low airfares to get you there (courtesy of Malaysia's own Air Asia).
Warren wrote:Ubi mel ibi apes
Wow. That's pretty bad...or good, depending on your level of pun resistance :-)
DavidG
Posts: 136
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 2:17 am

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by DavidG »

I always loved each and every animal i saw, until i met Long-tailed Macaques
User avatar
Hans Breuer (twoton)
Posts: 3230
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 3:19 am
Location: Kuching, Sarawak (Borneo)
Contact:

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by Hans Breuer (twoton) »

DavidG wrote:I always loved each and every animal i saw, until i met Long-tailed Macaques
Hahaaa, yeah, that's about the size of it.
User avatar
Curtis Hart
Posts: 595
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 5:07 pm
Location: Hillsdale County, Michigan

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by Curtis Hart »

DavidG wrote:I always loved each and every animal i saw, until i met Long-tailed Macaques
Wait until you meet a Rhesus Macaque.

Great post Hans. I really liked the Proboscis Monkeys. I can understand the no Gibbons, but I am a little surprised you don't have any Langur pics. Are they not in your area either. Oh, and you left of North Sulawesi in the places you're a short flight from.
Andy Avram wrote: Mammal forum?
We can only dream.



Curtis
User avatar
CCarille
Posts: 380
Joined: January 8th, 2011, 5:51 am
Location: NY

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by CCarille »

Great post Hans! Although not your photo, I love the one of the macaque climbing in the rain!

It really is amazing the number of primates in Borneo. While at Danau Girang Field Centre this last summer, I got to be a part of the first ever Slow Loris collaring (you may have read it in the paper - Danica Stark was the researcher to perform the collaring). I got to see a lot of primates in the wild and get some nice photos as well - unfortunately no dominant male orangs with the large cheek pouches or any photos of the slow loris (stress - so only one photographer, a researcher not me). I also got to experience some macaque mischief - one broke through the screen dining hall and stole powdered milk leaving a nice white trail everywhere! haha

I don't know if it's in another post, but you ever run into any tarsiers?
User avatar
Hans Breuer (twoton)
Posts: 3230
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 3:19 am
Location: Kuching, Sarawak (Borneo)
Contact:

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by Hans Breuer (twoton) »

CCarille wrote: I don't know if it's in another post, but you ever run into any tarsiers?
Have I ever. What a night that was....

Langurs, yes. Totally forgot about those. They're here, yes. Shy fellers, though. The best place to see them is Permai Rainforest Resort:
Silver-leaf Langur, Trachypithecus cristatus, in bad light.
Image

Next up: trucks with a speed problem - if I ever get to see and photograph them. They live much higher up in the trees than tarsiers.
User avatar
MaartenSFS
Posts: 466
Joined: February 6th, 2011, 9:09 pm
Location: Guilin, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by MaartenSFS »

O my.. How big was that large male Orang-utan? He looks like he could dismember me in his sleep. The close up of his face looks EVIL.
User avatar
Hans Breuer (twoton)
Posts: 3230
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 3:19 am
Location: Kuching, Sarawak (Borneo)
Contact:

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by Hans Breuer (twoton) »

MaartenSFS wrote:O my.. How big was that large male Orang-utan? He looks like he could dismember me in his sleep.
Yep. That big :-)
User avatar
MaartenSFS
Posts: 466
Joined: February 6th, 2011, 9:09 pm
Location: Guilin, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by MaartenSFS »

How large in relation to a human, though?
User avatar
moloch
Posts: 561
Joined: June 16th, 2010, 1:26 pm

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by moloch »

Very interesting, Hans. It would be nice to see primates like those when in the field.

Are there Proboscis monkeys at Permai or is Bako essential?

Regards,
David
User avatar
CCarille
Posts: 380
Joined: January 8th, 2011, 5:51 am
Location: NY

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by CCarille »

Hans Breuer (twoton) wrote:
CCarille wrote: I don't know if it's in another post, but you ever run into any tarsiers?
Have I ever. What a night that was....
Thanks for the link! Amazing seeing a tarsier - thanks for that post!
User avatar
Hans Breuer (twoton)
Posts: 3230
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 3:19 am
Location: Kuching, Sarawak (Borneo)
Contact:

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by Hans Breuer (twoton) »

MaartenSFS wrote:How large in relation to a human, though?
I'd say about six feet, raised up.

David, Bako is essential for close-ups with Dutchmen. Permai doesn't have them. But Permai has at least one troop of habituated Silver-leaf Langurs. I met them last Saturday again, they're not very shy.
alessio
Posts: 14
Joined: November 7th, 2011, 12:36 pm

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by alessio »

Love the pictures, thanks. Primates are definitely my biggest passion, right after reptiles.

I will never forgive myself for staying in my tent sleeping the afternoon my fellow travellers were out herping and saw the only wild orang-utan we (they!) sighted during the trip...
At least I saw a big group of Nasalis larvatus along the Kinabatangan river. And also some macaques yelling at a Varanus salvator that attempted to catch a baby, that was thrilling.
User avatar
Hans Breuer (twoton)
Posts: 3230
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 3:19 am
Location: Kuching, Sarawak (Borneo)
Contact:

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by Hans Breuer (twoton) »

alessio wrote: And also some macaques yelling at a Varanus salvator that attempted to catch a baby, that was thrilling.
Woah. Any pix?

Here are a few more langurs I met in Permai last Saturday. In fact, the entire troop crossed my path right in front of me - right by the entrance to the resort.

Image

Image

The world as seen by Trachypithecus cristatus:
Image
alessio
Posts: 14
Joined: November 7th, 2011, 12:36 pm

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by alessio »

Hans Breuer (twoton) wrote:
alessio wrote: And also some macaques yelling at a Varanus salvator that attempted to catch a baby, that was thrilling.
Woah. Any pix?
Sadly, no. I did have my camera with me, but not my tripod, and it was too dark to shoot without it.
The monitor tried to take the macaques by surprise coming out of a small river. After the first try it came back twice, always swimming in the water, but the monkeys were alarmed and started screaming as soon as it was sighted in the distance. It eventually had to give up and go away on an empty stomach.
User avatar
Hans Breuer (twoton)
Posts: 3230
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 3:19 am
Location: Kuching, Sarawak (Borneo)
Contact:

Re: Borneo Dispatches #25: Bornean Miscellany, Part 5 - Prim

Post by Hans Breuer (twoton) »

Amazing!!! What a treat...
Post Reply